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SAN FRANCISCO—Mike Leake not only tossed his first career complete game, he homered in San Francisco's pitcher friendly ballpark -- the same place where Matt Cain had been perfect only two weeks earlier.

This night belonged to Leake, when all the hype surrounded the Giants' pitchers and their remarkable run with a franchise-record four straight shutouts.

Leake pitched a nine-hitter for his first career complete game and homered off Cain, and the Cincinnati Reds beat San Francisco 5-1 on Friday night.

"The story was Leakey," manager Dusty Baker said. "Leakey was hitting, he was fielding, he was doing about everything that an athlete does."

And the hitters staked him to a nice cushion immediately.

Zack Cozart hit the first pitch of the game from Cain over the wall in left-center and, just like that, San Francisco's franchise-best shutouts streak had ended.

"First pitch, I was trying to go away and it was middle," said Cain, who pitched baseball's 22nd perfect game here June 13 against the Astros.

Jay Bruce added a two-run double in the first among his four hits to stake Leake (3-5) to an early lead as the Reds got to Cain and snapped a four-game road skid. Leake homered with two outs in the sixth, his second of the year.

While Cain has the perfecto to his name, it was everybody else in the rotation -- Barry Zito, Ryan Vogelsong, Tim Lincecum and Madison Bumgarner, in that order -- involved in the remarkable string of shutouts. San Francisco also was the first team in major league history to blank four clubs when the opponent had begun the day in first place.

"It was great. It was a good run and I'm just sad I didn't keep it going," Cain said. "The guys had done a huge job over the (week) against the Dodgers and last night with Bumgarner's performance. I wanted to follow that up, and I didn't do that."

Cain (9-3), pitching at home in sold-out AT&T Park for the first time since tossing the 22nd perfect game June 13 against the Astros, had his career-best eight-game winning streak snapped.

The right-hander allowed three runs in the first inning for the first time since June 24, 2010, at Houston.

"Every time he goes out there he has no-hitter stuff and right away we jumped him in the first inning and we chipped on a couple more runs after that," Baker said. "When you can score like this, especially when you're the visiting team, it takes a lot of pressure off your pitcher."

San Francisco's pitching staff went 36 innings without allowing a run, beginning after Cain's start at Oakland last Sunday and lasting until his next outing. It was the longest scoreless innings streak in San Francisco history and second-longest to the franchise mark of 38 accomplished by the New York Giants in 1903 and `33.

Bruce also hit an RBI double in the seventh that chased Cain, matching his career high with four hits for the fifth time he has done it.

Cain's 11 hits in 6 2-3 innings matched his most given up this year and the right-hander lost for the first time in 11 starts since a defeat to Miami on May 1. He allowed five runs, struck out seven and walked one.

Leake came out for the ninth and allowed Pablo Sandoval's one-out home run before retiring Brandon Belt on a deep fly to center and striking out Brandon Crawford to end his impressive 111-pitch performance.

"I'm not huge on complete games but it was nice to get one finally," he said. "Couldn't happen without the defense we had today and the early start that we got in the first inning."

Leake escaped the fourth on an inning-ending double play on which Sandoval, trying to break it up, reached his right hand around shortstop Cozart's left leg to trip him up and keep him from turning it. Belt was initially called safe, then Baker raced out to argue. The umpiring crew visited and overturned the call to interference, ending the inning.

Manager Bruce Bochy said it was the right call. Sandoval made a legal slide, but the mistake was grabbing Cozart's leg.

"I did it," Sandoval admitted with a smile.

Brandon Phillips returned to the Reds lineup after he was scratched before Thursday night's series opener because of continuing effects from the blow to the head he received during Wednesday's 8-4 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers. Baker said Phillips passed all concussion tests Friday.

Phillips went 1 for 5 with a seventh-inning single and stolen base before scoring on Bruce's second double.

"He was trying hard to lobby to get back in the lineup," Baker said.

Leake singled in the second ahead of his homer. Joey Votto contributed three hits for the Reds, who are on an 11-game road trip to wrap up the first half.

NOTES: Leake threw 76 pitches for strikes. His 37 hits over the last three seasons are most by any major league pitcher. ... A low-hovering blimp cause plenty of uneasiness for those watching it swirl in the wind just above the ballpark and near the center field light poles early in the game. At first pitch, the wind was 12mph blowing toward center. ... Baker managed the Giants' 2002 World Series runner-up team that will be honored here Sunday. "It's hard to believe it's been 10 years," Baker said. "My son was 3 at the time. Now he's 13." Some players have already begun to arrive, including Benito Santiago and Pedro Feliz. Home run king Barry Bonds is scheduled to attend the festivities. ... Baker is 15-13 as a visiting manager at AT&T Park.